Search This Blog

Loading...

Monday, 24 January 2011

Parsonage reopens next month

News release:

The BrontëParsonageMuseum in Haworth will be re-opening on Tuesday 1 February following a hectic month of activity including maintenance work, cleaning, conservation, revaluation of the museum’s collections, decorative archaeology and development of new displays.

The museum closes every January so that essential work can be carried out without disturbing visitors. As well as all of the usual tasks undertaken, this year included a team of experts visiting the museum to carry out decorative analysis which it is hoped will provide new evidence of the scheme of decoration in the Parsonage during the Brontës’ residence.

The work involves taking samples from walls, mouldings and woodwork and analyzing these using polarizing microscopy. It is the first time that such analysis has taken place at the Parsonage and, it is hoped, could lead to exciting new discoveries about the Brontës’ décor and the history of their Parsonage home. Information relating to the project will be made available to visitors and the museum will be formulating a plan to completely redecorate the Parsonage in 2012.

Visitors to the museum will also be able to see a variety of new displays, with more of the museum’s collection on display than ever. Items on display for the first time will include the original screenplay for the 1943 Hollywood film of Jane Eyre starring Orson Welles and Joan Fontaine.The screenplay is annotated by its author, the British writer Aldous Huxley. Huxley is famous for books such as Brave New World and The Doors of Perception, in which he wrote of his experiments with hallucinogenic drugs. The screenplay, produced in the war years, is stamped, ‘’Less shooting over here means more shooting over there! Save our film!”. It was acquired by the museum last year, with assistance from the MLA/V&A Purchase Grant Fund, and the museum will be screening the film at the West Lane Baptist Centre in Haworth on the evening of Friday 18 February. The Brontës will be continuing to feature in the world of the movies with new film versions of both Jane Eyre and WutheringHeights expected to be released in 2011.

A great deal of work goes on at the museum in January and we’re very much looking forward to re-opening our doors in February. There have been lots of changes to our displays and we hope that visitors from near and far will come along and see what’s new.

2 comments:

I am looking forward to seeing 'Jane Eyre' in February. It is always enjoyable to watch these films within sight of where the books were written. I think that Patrick Bronte would have been very interested in the 'polarizing microscopy' taking place at the parsonage.Who knows, there may be an unidiscovered paper concerning something similar that he wroteto some newspaper or other. As the 150th anniversary of his death approaches what would he think of Aldous Huxley's 'Brave New World'- only another 529 years to go!

Cool. I hope those who aren't aware with these kind of places especially those art fanatics can learn and go here. There's actually a mobile app that acts like an art guide where it tells me where a specific painting or any art can be found. I hope there is also an app that shows tourist spots of different countries. Oh, btw, for those curious, the name of the art guide app is ArtGuru.

Follow by Email

More than a literary society

The Brontë Society is one of the most important literary societies in the English-speaking world.

Its members come from that world and also from far beyond it, reflecting the continuing international appeal of the extraordinary family from Haworth. Formed in 1893 by a group made up mainly of enthusiastic Yorkshire journalists, the Society has grown into an organisation which has within it people from all callings and professions, all of whom are passionately interested in the lives of the Brontës and in what they created. They are encouraged to take part in the democratic processes of the Society, and to attend (if possible) the Annual General Meeting in Haworth in the first week of June each year.

Why not join now?

Membership subscriptions play a part in helping to preserve the Parsonage not only as an independent museum (no big government subsidies) but also as a thriving and developing centre for the creative arts, with an energetic and imaginative education programme.